Australian news and politics recap: Opposition Leader Peter Dutton calls for interest rate relief from RBA

Max Corstorphan
The Nightly
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton says he ‘hopes’ Australians will finally receive an interest rate cut tomorrow.
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton says he ‘hopes’ Australians will finally receive an interest rate cut tomorrow. Credit: LUKAS COCH/AAPIMAGE

Follow us for all the latest news and current affairs from across Australia and around the world, updated live throughout the day.

Max Corstorphan

‘Strongly favoured’: Rate cut hopes high despite concerns

A clear majority of economists believe the Reserve Bank of Australia will cut rates at its next board meeting, but they are less convinced than market pricing suggests.

Out of 32 Australian economists surveyed by AAP, 25 expected the RBA to drop its cash rate target by 25 basis points on Tuesday, bringing an end to 15 months with no change to monetary policy.

Expectations for a cut have ratcheted up in recent weeks, following a softer-than-expected December quarter CPI print that brought annual underlying inflation close to the RBA’s target band.

That was enough to convince Andrew Barker, head of research at non-profit think tank CEDA.

“The RBA is forward-looking in its interest rate decisions, as it takes a year or more for the full effects of lower interest rates to boost economic activity and thus prices,” he told AAP.

“This means above-target underlying inflation is not enough reason to avoid cutting rates.”

Traders are pricing in a 90 per cent chance of a cut, but many economists believe it will be a much closer-run thing than the market expects, with 22 per cent of economists surveyed expecting no change.

Morgans chief economist Michael Knox, Deloitte Access Economics partner Stephen Smith, Oxford Economics Australia’s Sean Langcake, HIA chief economist Tim Reardon, KPMG’s Brendan Rynne, University of Sydney professor Stella Huangfu and Judo Bank’s Warren Hogan predicted the RBA to hold for a 10th straight meeting.

“Even though the CPI quarterly trimmed mean has fallen to 3.2 per cent, we think that unemployment at four per cent is too low for a decline in inflation down to a sustained level of the RBA target of 2.5 per cent,” Mr Knox said.

Some economists such as UNSW professor Richard Holden, former RBA board member Warwick McKibbin and Steven Hamilton of George Washington University are predicting a cut, but believe it would be a bad idea.

“Market pricing has strongly favoured a cut for a while and RBA officials have had opportunities to lean against it but have not. Not cutting given market pricing would then be a big shock,” Professor Hamilton said.

“But, I think if they do cut, it will be all or nearly all the relief provided this year because the fundamentals (particularly the labour market and global outlook) simply do not offer much additional capacity for them to do so.

“As such, I would personally not cut, and would prefer to wait and see if core inflation continues to fall before doing so.”

READ THE FULL STORY

Comments

Latest Edition

The Nightly cover for 21-02-2025

Latest Edition

Edition Edition 21 February 202521 February 2025

Flights over Tasman forced to divert as Chinese Navy deploys live fire in exercises.